The Cambridge Handbook of AI in Civil Dispute Resolution

Author:   Amy J. Schmitz (Ohio State Moritz College of Law ) ,  Marco Giacalone (Vrije Universiteit Brussel ) ,  Pietro Ortolani (Radboud University)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
ISBN:  

9781009589116


Pages:   350
Publication Date:   11 June 2026
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Not yet available, will be POD   Availability explained
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The Cambridge Handbook of AI in Civil Dispute Resolution


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Author:   Amy J. Schmitz (Ohio State Moritz College of Law ) ,  Marco Giacalone (Vrije Universiteit Brussel ) ,  Pietro Ortolani (Radboud University)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
Imprint:   Cambridge University Press
ISBN:  

9781009589116


ISBN 10:   1009589113
Pages:   350
Publication Date:   11 June 2026
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
Availability:   Not yet available, will be POD   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon it's release. This is a print on demand item which is still yet to be released.

Table of Contents

Part I. The State of Play: 1. Responsible use of AI in civil dispute resolution Amy J. Schmitz; 2. Fitting AI within the dispute system design framework Janet K. Martinez and Grande Lum; 3. From AI ethics to AI regulation: emerging regulatory frameworks for AI-enhanced justice Natali Helberger and Isabella Banks; 4. The roles AI is (and should be) playing in dispute resolution: on the legitimacy of AI legal applications Orna Rabinovich and Talia Schwartz; 5. Balancing innovation and ethics: a content analysis of framework documents regulating generative AI in legal practice Giampiero Lupo; Part II. AI and Public Sector Dispute Resolution: 6. AI governance beyond EO 14110: federal efforts, state regulations, and civil litigation Iria Giuffrida and Daniel Shin; 7. The EU AI act and its effects on AI-enhanced civil justice in Europe Martin Ebers, Benedikt Quarch and Patrik Rode; 8. Artificial Intelligence and international commercial courts Georgios Dimitropoulos and Umar Azmeh; 9. Generative AI and civil justice: towards responsible use in judicial workflows Anna van Duin and Rachel Rietveld; 10. The use of AI in China's internet courts Chen Lei and Jia Wang; 11. Integrating AI in the Brazilian justice system Roberto Baumgarten Kuster and Elisa Lucena; 12. VoorRecht-rechtspraak: enhancing access to justice in the Netherlands with online (supported) dispute resolution Pieter van Riemsdijk and T. J. Helling; 13. The Terminator Judge III: the rise of the machines Nicolás Lozada, Federico Olsen and Jacobo Gómez; Part. III. AI and Private Sector Dispute Resolution: 14. Integrating AI in mediation Hannes Westermann; 15. The legal validity of the adoption of AI in decision-making in international commercial arbitration Sarah Hourani; 16. AI and arbitration in sub-sahara African countries Emilia Onyema; 17. AI and tools for expanding access to justice Quinten Steenhuis; 18. Contract performance management tools: the monitoring of contracts execution Silvia Martinelli; Part IV. Lessons for the Future: 19. AI and the public/private divide in civil dispute resolution Pietro Ortolani; 20. AI's role and challenges in shaping the future of arbitration Maud Piers and Hannah-Carlota Osaer; 21. AI and the future of public courts Nicolas Vermeys and Jinzhe Tan; 22. AI and the future of private dispute resolution settlements Marco Giacalone.

Reviews

'Artificial intelligence is permeating all sectors of activity, and conflict resolution is no exception. This collaborative work provides a comprehensive overview of the uses and practices of AI in conflict resolution that are beginning to develop, and also offers an interesting perspective on future trends. An essential book for anyone interested in the use of technology in civil justice.' Karim Benyekhlef, Cyberjustice Lab, Université de Montréal 'This volume convenes many of the top minds applying artificial intelligence to civil dispute resolution processes, creating a guidebook for where the ADR field is headed. The authors distill both what we know and what we need to know, enabling dispute systems designers to minimise the harms and maximise the benefit from AI's inevitable expansion. I believe the dispute resolvers of tomorrow will come to regard this book as an important milestone in envisioning the future of global dispute resolution.' Colin Rule, President and CEO, ODR


Author Information

Amy J. Schmitz is Professor & John Deaver Drink-Baker & Hostetler Chair in Law at The Ohio State Moritz College of Law. She is also a Co-Director of the Translational Data Analytics Institute (TDAI) CoP for Responsible Data Science as well as the Founder and Director of the JusticeTech Program at The Ohio State University. She is elected into the American Law Institute and has published extensively throughout the world, twice winning the CPR international book award and recently the ABA Award for Scholarly Achievement in Dispute Resolution. Marco Giacalone is a Research Professor in the Department of Private and Economic Law (PREC) at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB), where he is also a Co-Director of the Research Group on Digitalisation and Access to Justice (DIKE). His research examines the intersection of law, digitalisation, and access to justice, with particular focus on online dispute resolution (ODR), the use of AI in civil procedure, and comparative international perspectives. Pietro Ortolani is a Full Professor of Digital Conflict Resolution at Radboud University in Nijmegen, the Netherlands. Professor Ortolani has published in many peer-reviewed international journals, including the European Journal of International Law, the Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, the Journal of International Dispute Settlement and the Leiden Journal of International Law.

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